How Do Animals Grow?

Amino acid: molecules that contain carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen. These are the building blocks of protein... more

DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid is the information "blue-print" of the cell. It is a nucleic acid and is made from building blocks called nucleotides. This genetic information is passed from parent to child... more

How do animals grow?

Many people say “you are what you eat.” There is some truth to this statement. The food that animals eat can be transformed into usable energy for cells or can be used to build new cells, which form tissues like skin and muscle.

How exactly are foods transformed into tissues during growth? The process of growth involves eating food, breaking down food through digestion, absorbing nutrients from food, and building tissue.

Step 1: Eating

To start this process of growth organisms need to eat. Insects like the Manduca must eat a lot in order to multiply in size by 1000 times. Many animals spend the majority of their day eating food.

Step 2: Digestion

While some animals eat their food whole, most animals chew their food to break it down into smaller pieces, this is known as mechanical digestion. These pieces aren’t small enough to fit into cells, so the next step is to chemically digest the molecules in food into even smaller pieces using digestive enzymes and stomach acid. There are specific enzymes that break down the molecules found in food, which include: lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic acids.

Step 3: Absorption

Once the lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic acids are digested, they can be transformed into usable energy for tissues, or make up the tissues themselves.

For example, the proteins obtained from food are broken down into amino acids, which can be used to construct proteins found in the cells composing muscle tissue, and lipids provide the source for the fatty acids found in the membranes of all cells, which make up tissues.

So how does a Manduca larva increase its size by 1000 times? It takes the lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic acids from the foods it eats, and uses them to make more new cells, thereby increasing its body size. This is the same process that is used for growth in all living things, from mosquitos to blue whales.

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Be part of Ask A Biologist

by volunteering, or simply sending us feedback on the site. Scientists, teachers, writers, illustrators, and translators are all important to the program. If you are interested in helping with the website we have a Volunteer page to get the process started.